Sierra Leone Government of Maada Bio Steals COVID Funds Supported by International Communities.
(Financial Transparency UK Ranks Sierra Leone on List of Nations that Steals COVID Funds)
By a press release (26/04/2021)
UK-based Financial Transparency Coalition FTC has ranked Sierra Leone second on a list of nine countries that stole COVID-19 finances.
A new report released on Thursday, April 22, by the UK-based Financial Transparency Coalition (FTC) has ranked Sierra Leone second among a list of nine countries that misspent international COVID-19 recovery funds. The FTC report, “Towards a People’s Recovery: Tracking Fiscal and Social Protection Responses to Covid-19 [sic] in the Global South”, examined expenditures in nine countries, including Bangladesh, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, India, Kenya, Nepal, Sierra Leone, and South Africa. The FTC report is the first major analysis of the use of public funds disbursed in developing countries to respond to the COVID-19 pandemic. The Financial Transparency Coalition (FTC) works to curtail illicit financial flows through the promotion of a transparent, accountable, and sustainable financial system that works for everyone. (Photo: Finance Minister Jacob Jusu Saffa, a big thief).
The FTC is a global coalition whose Coordinating Committee includes the following non-governmental organisations: Asian Peoples’ Movement on Debt and Development, Centre for Budget Governance Accountability (New Delhi), Christian Aid (London), European Network on Debt and Development (Brussels), Fundación Ses (Buenos Aires), Global Financial Integrity (Washington, DC), La Red Latinoamericana por Justicia Económica y Social (Lima, Peru), Tax Justice Network – Africa (London), and Transparency International (Berlin).
The vast majority of Covid-19 recovery funds have gone to big corporations instead of toward welfare, small firms, or those working in the informal economy, according to the first major analysis of public bailout funds disbursed in developing countries during the pandemic. The FTC Tracker Report and partners analysed data from a total of nine countries: Kenya, South Africa, Sierra Leone, Bangladesh, India, Nepal, Honduras, Guatemala, and El Salvador. The report found a staggering 63 per cent of pandemic-related funds went on average to big businesses in eight of the nine surveyed countries, while only a quarter of the funds went to social protection.
However, the total corporate stimulus is likely to be even larger, as these numbers do not include expected revenue shortfalls from tax cuts, especially in Bangladesh and India, or the cost of tax amnesty programmes, as in Bangladesh and Honduras. Matti Kohonen, director of the Financial Transparency Coalition, said: “By the end of 2021, 150 million people are expected to fall into extreme poverty due to the pandemic. But in most countries, the main bailout funds are going to big corporations, while those most impacted by this crisis in the Global South – the poor, informal workers, and smaller businesses – are being left out. This threatens to further widen the gap between rich and poor, and increase countries’ mounting debt, all while undermining countries’ healthcare and social protection systems.”
In addition, the report also found:
In Kenya, 92 per cent of Covid-related bailout funds went to big corporations, rather than to those facing poverty. This made Kenya’s corporate tax rate the lowest in East Africa, fuelling tax competition. Sierra Leone fared slightly better, with 74 per cent of announced funds going to big trading corporations – but that proportion increased to 92 per cent when taking into account funds that have actually been allocated.
Only one country surveyed, Guatemala, spent more bailout money on social protections than on other categories, totalling 54 per cent, followed by India (38 per cent), South Africa (32 per cent), and Honduras (23 per cent).
Only two per cent of funds in the countries surveyed went to support workers in the informal sector, even though they often make most of the workforce. Some countries – like Bangladesh, South Africa, Nepal, and Honduras – did not allocate any funds for these workers. This comes despite the fact that, for instance, Bangladesh sees 87 per cent of its workforce work in the informal sector, similarly to Kenya.
Additionally, much of the money allocated to small and medium-sized businesses never reached these companies. In Bangladesh, for instance, only a third of funds allocated for smaller businesses had been disbursed by the time of the FTC’s survey. Similarly, in Guatemala, much of the money allocated to small and medium-sized businesses was diverted to other projects.
The FTC’s new report also warns about a lack of transparency of the recovery funds, including those provided by the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund. In Kenya, for instance, the World Bank provided $50 million in immediate funding to support the country’s emergency response – funds that are now unaccounted for. This is partly due to most international monitoring systems looking at initial funding announcements, rather than tracking the actual disbursement of funds.
Matti Kohonen, FTC’s director, added:
“Revery packages avera
To address the dangerous imbalance in existing Covid-19 relief funds, the FTC recommends the following:
Implement a minimum corporate tax rate of at least 25 per cent, in line with the proposal from the United Nations Financial Accountability, Transparency and Integrity (FACTI) Panel.
Adopt or raise taxes on the wealthy, corporations, and high-income earners to ensure those who can afford to pay would shoulder the lion share cost.
Implement public beneficial ownership registries, to know who benefits from recovery spending, and profits made during the pandemic.
Introduce greater accountability to provide transparency on the conditions attached and disbursements made of Covid-19 recovery funds, including World Bank funds.
Forward: Omega
Courtesy: Financial Transparency.Org